Authors: Tom Sniegoski
Lucas held fast. “The police are close,” he told the man. He didn’t know what to believe anymore. Was this truly his father?
The Raptor seemed to recognize the truth of Lucas’s words. “They would have killed each other, with no account given to the innocents around them,” he growled, still holding the man up with one hand. He gave the guy a good shake, and the Zombie gangbanger moaned. His hand looked awful, like something out of a horror movie, dangling uselessly at his side, only this was real, not a special effect. Lucas wondered if doctors would be able to save it.
“I know that,” Lucas said. He tried to make his voice sound as calm as possible. “But you stopped them … him … and now we should leave it up to the proper authorities.”
Something in the Raptor’s expression changed. Was that his father now looking back at him through the red lenses of the hero’s cowl?
“Put him down and let’s go,” Lucas urged again.
The police were even closer now, and from the sounds of it, they’d brought the whole force.
“We’ve really got to go,” Lucas said, giving his father’s arm a tug. “The police will be swarming this place in seconds.”
His father nodded slowly, turning his attention to the mewling man still held aloft in his grasp.
“Next time, punk,” the Raptor snarled, letting the wannabe supervillain drop to the ground. The shooter curled up into a tight ball, clutching his injured hand to his chest.
The Raptor then turned to Lucas, and for a moment the boy had no idea what might happen next. “Are … are you all right?” Lucas stammered.
The costumed hero turned, lifting his arms and activating his costume’s flight capabilities.
“I stopped being all right a long time ago,” he replied coldly.
Then he jumped into the night sky, soaring above the carnage.
It was a cool autumn night in Seraph City, a sharp wind blowing off the Atlantic giving a hint of the harsh winter that would arrive all too soon.
Illuminated by a hunter’s moon, the lithe, costumed figure of Lucas Moore darted across a rooftop, preparing to leap to the next one.
“Oh, crap,” he muttered beneath his breath, coming to a screeching halt.
“What is it?” Hartwell asked through a tiny receiver built into the black mask Lucas wore.
“Nothing,” Lucas answered.
“You wouldn’t have said ‘oh, crap’ if there wasn’t something.”
“It’s just that … they’re a lot farther apart than I
thought,” Lucas admitted, looking from one roof across to the next.
“You shouldn’t have any problem with the jump,” Hartwell said dryly. “Your nanite-enhanced leg strength, plus the augmentation provided by the costume’s exoskeleton, should allow you to make the distance with very little effort.”
“You think?” Lucas asked, still not convinced.
“Lucas, I designed the costume. I know full well what it and the nanites in your blood are capable of. Trust me.”
It had been a month since he’d been given the more sophisticated costume—his “supersuit,” as he liked to call it, much to his father’s distaste. Hartwell didn’t appreciate his calling such a complicated piece of hardware such a cartoonish name.
But Lucas thought it was perfect.
Lucas had gone through another extensive training period so that he could fully appreciate all the capabilities of his new costume. According to his father, this suit had been designed to improve his already-nanite-enhanced body, making him
better
than perfect. In it he would be unstoppable; at least, that was what his father was telling him.
Lucas had to admit, it was a rush to feel this strong.
He walked away from the building’s edge and turned around. “Probably going to need a running start,” he said to himself, forgetting that the old man could hear.
“Not necessarily,” Hartwell answered in his ear. “But if you think it will help.”
Taking a few quick breaths—the smell of his sweat mixing with the chemical-plastic smell of his mask—he started to run toward the building ledge.
Before reaching the end of the rooftop, he tensed the muscles in his legs, springing off with some pretty incredible results.
Lucas soared through the air on his own power.
Hartwell had brought him to Seraph proper for this exercise in a small helicopter designed for stealth. The craft was much smaller than the average chopper and was equipped with technology that rendered it nearly silent and practically invisible.
From a secret helipad at the back of Hartwell Manor, they had flown to the city, dropping Lucas off atop one of the city’s many tall office buildings. Jumping down from the craft to the roof, Lucas hadn’t even heard the stealth craft leave.
But now he was flying without the help of a high-tech helicopter. This was all him, his strength increased by the exoskeleton built into his costume, of course.
He started to descend, the rooftop of the next building coming up fast, and he braced himself for impact. Barely avoiding an air-conditioning unit on the roof, he landed in a crouch, his momentum causing him to tumble toward the building’s edge.
“And how did we do?” his father asked from his command center back at Hartwell Manor.
“Good,” Lucas answered, not feeling the need to share everything. “It was good.”
He was going to need to work on his landings.
“Excellent,” Hartwell responded in his ear. “I need you to make your way south toward the Kessler Building.”
Lucas placed a hand against the side of his mask and
pushed gently. A small computer mapping system was projected in front of his eyes.
“Got it,” he said, leaping from that rooftop down onto another with growing confidence.
He left the mapping system up to help guide him to the Kessler. Seraph was about a hundred times the size of Perdition, and he needed all the help he could get.
Jumping from rooftop to rooftop on nightly patrols, he guessed that eventually he would get to know the place. He couldn’t help being in awe of Seraph. He had never been to any place larger than Phoenix, so this was like visiting another planet.
The buildings grew significantly smaller as he neared the Kessler, in one of the older sections of the city. He’d reached an area bustling with new construction. Out of the corner of his eye, he noticed a banner hanging from one of the skeletal new buildings bearing the name of one of Hartwell’s many companies.
“Putting up some new buildings?” he asked casually. He jumped down to the shadows, moving across the construction site, practicing not being noticed.
“Yes,” his father answered. “Please proceed to …”
Something caught Lucas’s attention and he stopped to stare.
“What’s this?” he asked aloud.
He was standing before a statue—a monument, really. It was a statue of the Raptor. A statue in honor of his father.
Lucas examined it more closely. He read that it had been erected by the city as thanks for what the Raptor had done to save lives in this very spot over twenty years ago.
He thought of his father’s story about the explosion that had changed his life. The explosion that had killed one Raptor and allowed another to be born.
“Lucas?” his father called to him.
“I’m looking at a statue of you,” he said.
“Oh, that,” his father said coldly. “A monument to my failure.”
“It’s pretty awesome,” the boy said. The statue was bronze and depicted the Raptor—wearing an older design of his costume—standing with his head bowed. There were bronze representations of a firefighter and a police officer standing on either side of the superhero. The plaque read,
IN HONOR OF THOSE WHO RISK THEIR LIVES SO THAT OTHERS MAY SAFELY LIVE
.
“Is this where it happened?” Lucas asked, looking around. There was no sign of how it had once been.
“Yes,” his father answered. “Now I think it’s time for you to move along.”
Lucas was about to ask more about that night but decided against it. His father seemed very uncomfortable talking about the incident. Lucas made a mental note to do some research. After all, if he was going to assume the mantle of the Raptor, he would need to know every possible detail.
Lucas left the construction site, climbing the side of a nearby office building to return to the rooftops. He was getting better at leaping, no longer imagining himself splattered on the ground beneath the towering city structures. This was what it was all about, he thought. Little by little, he was learning everything that would allow him to become the kind of hero Seraph needed.
His thoughts flashed back briefly to the night in the War Zone. Later, when Lucas had questioned Hartwell about whether or not he would have killed the Zombie thug, his father had claimed he never would have done such a thing. It had all been part of Lucas’s training, he had told him, to see how he would react in that particular situation.
Lucas wasn’t exactly sure he believed that. What he’d seen that night had scared him a bit, but it had also moved him to make a promise to himself. No matter how hard it got, or how desperate the situation, he would never take a life. He wasn’t sure what had pushed his father so far that night that he had been willing to kill. He chose to believe it was stress, a momentary impulse. He chose to believe his father was a good man.
Crouching on the roof of a hotel, Lucas spotted his destination.
“I see it,” he said.
“Good,” Hartwell answered. “I want you to find your way inside.”
“Are you going to tell me what I’m doing tonight?” Lucas asked, dropping down to an alleyway from the roof of the hotel. He barely felt the impact, his legs and the mechanisms in the suit absorbing the shock with ease.
“Street intel has provided me with information about the current location of the Science Club,” Hartwell explained.
“The Science Club?” Lucas questioned, darting down the alleyway. “They certainly don’t sound like much.”
“The Science Club is a band of renegade scientists
responsible for providing high-tech weaponry to criminals around the world,” Hartwell said.
“Interesting,” Lucas muttered as he sprang up from the alley, using the claws built into his gloves to scale the wall like some giant insect. “I always wondered where the super-villains got their stuff.” He clambered over the side of the abandoned office building and onto the roof.
The map in his face mask told him the Kessler Building was right across from his current location. He figured the easiest way inside the old building was through the roof.
He reached up to the other side of his mask and tapped alongside his eyes. Telescopic lenses were activated, giving him a good view of the rooftop. He saw a skylight and figured that would probably be the easiest way to get inside.
“I’m getting ready to jump across,” Lucas said, walking back to get a good running start. “And then I’ll see what I can do about closing down this Science Club for good.”
A thrill of excitement went through him as he crossed the rooftop. This would be his first physical confrontation since the incident in the War Zone.
“Lucas,” his father called, interrupting his thoughts.
He stopped to listen. “I’m here.”
“There’s something more you might want to know about the Science Club.”
“Okay, shoot.”
“I believe they’re the individuals who provided the weaponry and vehicles to the ones who attacked the trailer park,” he said.
Lucas felt a jolt like electricity course through his body,
as if he’d accidentally taken hold of a live wire. He remained silent, fixated on the building across from the rooftop.
“Are you still there?” Hartwell asked.
“I am,” he answered coldly.
“The information from the sensors in your suit suggests there might be something wrong.”
“Wrong?” Lucas asked, starting to run across the roof at top speed before leaping out into space. “What could possibly be wrong?”
Lucas touched down silently; he was getting better at this. Scanning the rooftop, he saw nothing out of the ordinary and carefully crossed to the skylight.
“I’m approaching the skylight,” he whispered for only his father to hear.
“Careful now,” Hartwell cautioned. “The Science Club is far more dangerous than you could even hope to imagine.”
Lucas reached the skylight and peered down through the bird droppings and thick glass at an elaborate warehouse space below.
“It looks kind of like a factory,” he said, watching as men clad in colorful jumpsuits moved from one machine to another. “These are the guys who made the weapons that killed my mother? They look like a bunch of geeks.”
Lucas heard a scuffling sound on the rooftop behind him and spun around to face it.
“Oh, crap,” he said, not believing his eyes. “Where the hell did that come from?”
“What is it, Lucas?” Hartwell asked.
Lucas was about to tell him that there was a robot with
machine guns for arms standing across from him, but he didn’t have the chance.
The robot opened fire. Multiple rounds from both weapons drove Lucas backward toward the skylight. He put up his hands, attempting to block some of the bullets, and silently thanked his father for finding the special bulletproof material his costume was woven from.
Not that he couldn’t feel the shots. They were sort of like hornet stings, only about ten times more painful.
Another robot rose up from a hidden compartment in the rooftop and also began to fire at Lucas.
“Lucas!” Hartwell screamed in his ear. “Report! What is your status?”
Lucas wanted to answer, but it was too much. It was like being caught in a storm of pain. He was driven farther backward until he had nowhere else to go.
The heel of one of his boots struck the frame of the skylight, throwing him off balance. No matter how hard he tried to regain his balance, he couldn’t. He found himself falling backward, the full brunt of his weight landing on the skylight, shattering the thick glass as he fell through to the warehouse space below.
At least I got away from the robots
, he thought as he fell, just before hitting a table covered in machine parts that collapsed under his weight.
Stunned by the impact, Lucas managed to push himself up. Alarms began blaring inside the vast space, and the Science Club members ran around wildly.